posted on 2021-10-15, 13:41authored byRana Sanii, Ewa Patyk-Kaźmierczak, Carol Hua, Shaza Darwish, Tony Pham, Katherine A. Forrest, Brian Space, Michael J. Zaworotko
The propensity of molecular organic compounds to form
stoichiometric or nonstoichiometric crystalline hydrates remains a challenging
aspect of crystal engineering and is of practical relevance to fields such as
pharmaceutical science. In this work, we address the propensity for hydrate
formation of a library of eight compounds comprised of 5- and 6-membered N-heterocyclic aromatics classified into three subgroups: linear dipyridyls, substituted
Schiff bases, and tripodal molecules. Each molecular compound studied possesses
strong hydrogen bond acceptors and is devoid of strong hydrogen bond donors.
Four methods were used to screen for hydrate propensity using the anhydrate
forms of the molecular compounds in our library: water slurry under ambient
conditions, exposure to humidity, aqueous solvent drop grinding (SDG), and
dynamic water vapor sorption (DVS). In addition, crystallization from mixed
solvents was studied. Water slurry, aqueous SDG, and exposure to humidity were found to be the most effective methods for hydrate
screening. Our study also involved a structural analysis using the Cambridge Structural Database, electrostatic potential (ESP) maps,
full interaction maps (FIMs), and crystal packing motifs. The hydrate propensity of each compound studied was compared to a
compound of the same type known to form a hydrate through a previous study of ours. Out of the eight newly studied compounds
(herein numbered 4−11), three Schiff bases were observed to form hydrates. Three crystal structures (two hydrates and one
anhydrate) were determined. Compound 6 crystallized as an isolated site hydrate in the monoclinic space group P21/a, while 7 and
10 crystallized in the monoclinic space group P21/c as a channel tetrahydrate and an anhydrate, respectively. Whereas we did not
find any direct correlation between the number of H−bond acceptors and either hydrate propensity or the stoichiometry of the
resulting hydrates, analysis of FIMs suggested that hydrates tend to form when the corresponding anhydrate structure does not
facilitate intermolecular interactions.
Funding
Investigation of the triple mutual system Li, Ba // BO2, F and the growth of bulk crystals of b-BaB2O4